Prog

“The harder I work, the luckier I get.”

From the outside looking in, Russian Circles’ seventh studio album, Blood Year, was a rapturous moment. The trio had spent 15 years at the pinnacle of the post-rock genre by the time it came out in August 2019, and it both honoured their time-tested conventions – looping riffs, fragile melodies, crescendoing song structures – and pushed them into new realms of angular prog metal. Plus, they played ArcTanGent and toured countries as far flung as Japan off the back of it.

For any other band, Blood Year would be a symbol of triumph. However, guitarist Mike Sullivan is far from jubilant when reflecting on it.

“It’s not my favourite record of ours,” he tells over Zoom. “I don’t know if I should say that. Usually, whencontinued further with a March European tour, but then the pandemic killed touring for almost 18 months. The guitarist tried to figure out the root cause of his pain during that time.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Prog

Prog1 min read
Eye Looks Away From Mwwb With Debut Album
Eye – the new project from Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard (MWWB) singer-songwriter and musician Jessica Ball – have announced the release of their debut album Dark Light on April 23 via New Heavy Sounds. The band was put together when Ball relocated fro
Prog2 min read
The Smile
VENUE EVENTIM APOLLO, LONDON DATE 10/03/2024 When Thom Yorke sings, ‘Just gotta turn myself inside out…’ on Friend Of A Friend, it’s hard to shake the feeling that he could well be referencing The Smile’s modus operandi when it comes to their songwri
Prog4 min read
Back From The DEAD
For a lot of bands, coming up with a name is an unceremonious thing. Quite often it boils down to questions as simple as “What sounds cool?” or “What rolls off the tongue well?” Such is not the case with Zombi. The Pennsylvanian synth-prog duo, made

Related Books & Audiobooks